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A.) Introduction: 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring amount of current and time required to complete reaction charge = current (i) x time in coulombs - electrolytic method external power added to system 2.) Example: - Coulometric Titration of Cl - - use Ag electrode to produce Ag + Ag (s) Ag + + e - Ag + + Cl - AgCl (ppt.) - measure Ag + in solution by 2 nd electrode - only get complete circuit when Ag + exists in solution - only occurs after all Cl - is consumed Coulometric Methods
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A.) Introduction : 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring.

Dec 13, 2015

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Page 1: A.) Introduction : 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring.

A.) Introduction:1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction

of analyte- measure amount of analyte by measuring amount of current and

time required to complete reaction

charge = current (i) x time in coulombs

- electrolytic method external power added to system2.) Example:

- Coulometric Titration of Cl-

- use Ag electrode to produce Ag+

Ag (s) ↔ Ag+ + e-

Ag+ + Cl- ↔AgCl (ppt.)

- measure Ag+ in solution by 2nd electrode- only get complete circuit when Ag+ exists in solution- only occurs after all Cl- is consumed- by measuring amount of current and time required to complete reaction can determine amount of Cl-

Coulometric Methods

Page 2: A.) Introduction : 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring.

Typical coulometric titration cell.

e.g. At the generator electrode (anode)

Ag (s) Ag+ + e- (oxidation of silver to silver ion)

At the cathode:Possible reaction

2H+ + 2e- H2 (g) (hydrogen evolution)

Therefore, need sintered glass to separate the species generated in the other electrode (e.g. cathode, hydrogen gas) to prevent reactions with the “titration species” such as Ag+.

cathode

anode

Page 3: A.) Introduction : 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring.

3.) Based on Measurement of Amount of Electricity (or charge, in coulombs) Required to Convert Analyte to Different Oxidation State

- Q = It for constant current with time

where:

Q = charge required (coulombs = amp . sec)I = current (amp.)t = time of current (sec)

for variable current with time:

Q = Idt

Relate charge (coulombs, C) to moles of e- passing electrode by Faraday constant

Faraday (F) = 96,485 Coulombs (C)/mole e-

F = 6.022 x 1023 e-/ mole e- x 1.60218 x 10-19 C/ e- = 96,485 Coulombs/mole e-

If know moles of e- produced and stoichiometry of ½ cell reaction:

Ag (s) ↔ Ag+ + e- (1:1 Ag+/e-)

gives moles of analyte generated, consumed, etc.

0

t

Page 4: A.) Introduction : 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring.

Example:

Constant current of 0.800 A (amps.) used to deposit Cu at the cathode and O2 at anode of an electrolytic cell for 15.2 minutes. What quantity in grams is formed for each product?

½ cell reactions:Cu2+ + 2e- Cu (s) (cathode)2H2O 4e- + O2 + 4H+ (anode)

To solve:

Q = i.tQ = (0.800 A)(15.2 min) (60 sec/min)

Q = 729.6 C (amp.sec)

amount Cu produced:=(729.6 C)(1 mole e-/96,485 C)(1 mole Cu/2 mole e-)(63.5g Cu/mole

Cu)= 0.240 g Cu

amount of O2 produced:

=(729.6 C)(1 mole e-/96,485 C)(1 mole O2/4 mole e-)(32.0g O2/mole O2)

= 0.0605 g O2

Page 5: A.) Introduction : 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring.

4.) Two Types of Coulometric Methodsa) amperostatic (coulmetric titration)

- most common of twob) potentiostatic

Fundamental requirement for both methods is 100% current efficiency

- all e- go to participate in the desired electrochemical process- If not, then takes more current over-estimate amount of analyte

B) Amperostatic Methods (Coulometric Titrations)

1.) Basics: titration of analyte in solution by using coulometry at constant current to generate a known quantity of titrant electrochemically

- potential set by contents of cell - Example:

Ag (s) ↔ Ag+ + e- for precipitation titration of Cl-

- To detect endpoint, use 2nd electrode to detect buildup of titrant after endpoint.

Page 6: A.) Introduction : 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring.

2.) Applications

a) Can be used for Acid-Base Titrations- Acid titration

2H2O + 2e- ↔ 2OH- + H2 titrant generation reaction

- Base titration

H2O ↔ 2H+ + ½ O2 + 2e- titrant generation reaction

b.) Can be used for Complexation Titrations (EDTA)

HgNH3Y2- + NH4+ + 2e- ↔ Hg + 2NH3 +HY3-

HY3- ↔ H+ + Y4-

c.) Can be used for Redox Titrations

Ce3+ ↔ Ce4+ + e-

Ce4+ + Fe2+ ↔ Ce3+ + Fe3+

Page 7: A.) Introduction : 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring.

3.) Comparison of Coulometric and Volumetric Titrationa) Both Have Observable Endpoint

- Current (e- generation)

serves same function as a standard titrant solution - Time

serves same function as volume delivered

- amount of analyte determined by combining capacity- reactions must be rapid, essentially complete and free of side reactions

b.) Advantages of Coulometry

- Both time and current easy to measure to a high accuracy

- Don’t have to worry about titrant stability- easier and more accurate for small quantities of reagent

small volumes of dilute solutions problem with volumetric- used for precipitation, complex formation oxidation/reduction or

neutralization reactions- readily automated

c) Sources of Error- variation of current during electrolysis- departure from 100% current efficiency- error in measurement of current- error in measurement of time- titration error (difference in equivalence point and end point)

Page 8: A.) Introduction : 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring.

4.) Change in Potential During Amperostatic Methodsa) In constant current system, potential of cell will vary with time as analyte is consumed.

- Cell “seeks out” electrochemical reactions capable of carrying the supplied current

Cu2+ + 2e- ↔ Cu (s) initial reaction

- Nernst Equation

Ecathode = EoCu2+/Cu – 0.0592/2 log (1/aCu2+)

Note: Ecathode depends on aCu2+. As aCu2+ decreases (deposited by reaction) Ecathode decreases.

Page 9: A.) Introduction : 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring.

- When all Cu2+ is consumed, current is carried by another electrochemical reaction

generation of H2 (g) if reduction

2H+ + 2e- ↔ H2 (g)

breakdown of water if oxidation

2H2O ↔ H2O2 + 2H+ + 2e-

H2O2 ↔ O2 + 2H+ + 2e-

- Not a problem as long as :(1) other species don’t co-deposit

(2) there isn’t a large excess of species being used in titrant generation vs.

titrated analyte

e.g., Ag (s) vs. Cl- in solution (in AgCl precipitation experiment)

M2+ + 2 e- M(s) (co-deposition)

Page 10: A.) Introduction : 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring.

C) Potentiostatic Coulometry

1.) Basics: -detection of analyte in solution by using Coulometry at fixed potential to

quantitatively convert analyte to a given form

current controlled by contents of cell.

2.) Instrumentation requirements:

- electrochemical/electrolysis cell

- a potentiostat (apply the required potential/voltage to the system)

- an integrator (analog or digital) for determination of the charged consumed

Electrochemical cell

Equivalent circuit

Practical Circuit of a Potentiostat and an Electrochemical/Electrolysis

Page 11: A.) Introduction : 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring.

2) Advantages:- more specific than amperostatic coulometry

avoids redox of species that may interfere with constant current coulometry

- can be used for over 55 elements without major interference

3) Disadvantages- does take longer than amperostatic titration

current (i) decreases with time

conversion becomes slower as less analyte around to oxidize or reduce

It = Ioe-kt

k = 25.8 DA/Vwhere:

It = current at time t (A)

I0 = initial current (A)

t = time (sec)

D = diffusion coefficient (cm2/s)

A = electrode surface area (cm2)

V = volume of solution (cm3)

= thickness of the surface layer

where concentration gradient exists (cm)*** typical values of D are in the range of 10-5cm2/s

*** typical values of d is 2 x 10-3 cm

Page 12: A.) Introduction : 1.) Coulometry: electrochemical method based on the quantitative oxidation or reduction of analyte - measure amount of analyte by measuring.

4) Other Applications of constant potential coulometry

- electroplating, apply the correct potential, the “metal of interest” will be deposited.

e.g. gold plated onto silver (vermeil) as jewelry

e.g. zinc plated onto steel for anti-corrosion (zinc as “sacrificial cathodic coating”)

The term "vermeil" refers to a silver item, containing no less than 92.5% silver, that has been plated

with a gold or gold alloy that is no less than 10 karat, to a thickness of not less than 2.5 microns.

Example (using the two equations):

Deposition of Copper:

Cu2+ + 2e- Cu (s)

After 30 min, current decreases from the initial 1.5 A to 0.08A By this time, approx. 96% of the copper has been deposited.